devilfish

Palm civet - Chatuchak market, June 2013.

  • Media owner devilfish
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Photo taken on the 16th June 2013.
These are fascinating, if rather unpleasant, pictures. Did people mind your taking photos?

In general, yes. If there was someone around then I would always ask, and a lot of the time I was told that it was absolutely fine. I still got stopped quite a few times, and many stalls prohibited photography (obviously these tended to be home to the more interesting animals,) and a few wouldn't even let me in to begin with (including a reptile stall packed with venomous snakes). I initially wrote down some of the prices I was coming across in my notebook (out of interest) but this increased some sellers' hostility, so I quickly stopped.
 
I got a torrent of abuse from a couple of stall-holders ("no photos! Very bad man! Very bad man!") when I was taking photos of squirrel stalls. The photo in the Squirrels of the World book is one of mine.
 
I got a torrent of abuse from a couple of stall-holders ("no photos! Very bad man! Very bad man!") when I was taking photos of squirrel stalls. The photo in the Squirrels of the World book is one of mine.

Do these vendors get harassed by animal rights people and conservation folks (I hope that they do)? Is that why they would be very defensive of photos?
 
So is the civet being sold as a pet? I wouldn't have thought they would be particularly popular pets, nor a popular food choice.
 
Do these vendors get harassed by animal rights people and conservation folks (I hope that they do)? Is that why they would be very defensive of photos?

NGOs frequently visit Chatuchak to check on these stalls, so the vendors are naturally wary of Westerners trying to take pictures.
 
So is the civet being sold as a pet? I wouldn't have thought they would be particularly popular pets, nor a popular food choice.

Chatuchak market is as exotic as it gets. All kinds of animals end up there. Civets aren't that common as pets - squirrels, chipmunks and of late prairie dogs (and herptiles + tarantulas) are everywhere. But if you were in China, all the animals would probably be meant for the kitchen.
 
and what was the going rate for a palm civet? Ot a squirrel?

I've just looked at my list and I've only written down a few fish.

I think squirrels started around 12-15$, and the civet was around a couple of thousand baht. There were civets in much poorer condition elsewhere which I imagine would have been a lot cheaper.
 

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